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kalvaryja Latitude and Longitude:

53°54′30″N 27°30′14″E / 53.90833°N 27.50389°E / 53.90833; 27.50389
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kalvaryja Cemetery
Kalvaryja entrance
Details
Established1808 ?
Location
Country Belarus
Owned byState
Size13,9223 ha
No. of graves30,000+

Kalvaryja ( Belarusian: Кальварыя, [kʌlʲˈvarɨja]) is a Catholic Calvary cemetery in Minsk, Belarus.

The cemetery contains a small Catholic chapel, currently used for general worship. The original wooden Catholic church was first built here back in 1673, but currently the oldest remaining graves are from 1808. The small chapel was built in 1839. Several famous Polish and Belarusian personalities from the 19th century are buried at Kalvaryja.[ citation needed]

In 2001, the cemetery became the center of a controversy when it was revealed that the state-run company responsible for taking care of the graves was destroying old graves and selling the newly freed slots to the wealthy.[ citation needed]

Adam Hlobus wrote a short story set in Kalvaryja. [1]

External links

References

  1. ^ Globus, Adam (March 1993). "Death is a man". Index on Censorship. 22 (3): 7–15. doi: 10.1080/03064229308535525. ISSN  0306-4220. Retrieved 5 February 2024.

53°54′30″N 27°30′14″E / 53.90833°N 27.50389°E / 53.90833; 27.50389



kalvaryja Latitude and Longitude:

53°54′30″N 27°30′14″E / 53.90833°N 27.50389°E / 53.90833; 27.50389
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kalvaryja Cemetery
Kalvaryja entrance
Details
Established1808 ?
Location
Country Belarus
Owned byState
Size13,9223 ha
No. of graves30,000+

Kalvaryja ( Belarusian: Кальварыя, [kʌlʲˈvarɨja]) is a Catholic Calvary cemetery in Minsk, Belarus.

The cemetery contains a small Catholic chapel, currently used for general worship. The original wooden Catholic church was first built here back in 1673, but currently the oldest remaining graves are from 1808. The small chapel was built in 1839. Several famous Polish and Belarusian personalities from the 19th century are buried at Kalvaryja.[ citation needed]

In 2001, the cemetery became the center of a controversy when it was revealed that the state-run company responsible for taking care of the graves was destroying old graves and selling the newly freed slots to the wealthy.[ citation needed]

Adam Hlobus wrote a short story set in Kalvaryja. [1]

External links

References

  1. ^ Globus, Adam (March 1993). "Death is a man". Index on Censorship. 22 (3): 7–15. doi: 10.1080/03064229308535525. ISSN  0306-4220. Retrieved 5 February 2024.

53°54′30″N 27°30′14″E / 53.90833°N 27.50389°E / 53.90833; 27.50389



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